Monthly Archives: November 2013

It Just Is

I tell myself that I will again
call this place “ours”

when we can bury our dead here our way
and be buried here that way in turn

when the blood in the soil
stops weeping from loneliness

when we can plant trees here and feel safe
about our grandchildren living to see them

when those future forests again shrug
at our presence as matter of fact

when the names we give places
hold a music that pulls the land into shape

when we forget how to ghost dance
because it’s become unnecessary

when we forget to dance
for you

when we break the last camera
you’ve smuggled into our last bastions

when we stop you from plucking pointless feathers
from thin air and planting them in your hair

when we open up the shame vault and tell you
no your grandmother likely wasn’t

and if she was
it might have been by force

and ask you if it was by love
why you don’t know her name

when we stop being angry long enough
to pity you

and to laugh more than a little at you
as I realize

that I can call this place “ours”
any time I want

because after all this time
in spite of all that’s happened

it still is
it just is


Bad Band

I’m pretending to be
a bad band
silenced by changing tastes

sitting round mourning the fads
of the record industry
and the general public

scheming publicity stunts
and abrupt shifts in musical direction
under the guise of experimentation and growth

or perhaps instead actually thinking 
and planning experimentation and growth
as inspired by changing musical directions

knowing that no one
will believe the latter
makes for bitter blather

I pretend I’m a bad band
because the alternative
is to face myself as a bad man

and know that no one else
can possibly have my back
when it comes to reinvention


Why The Poor Have Pets

At the foot of the bed
there is Cat

unless she is in the closet

or on the dresser
or on top of the 

refrigerator

Her predictability is 
unpredictable
We know her spots but not
her schedule

But the first place to look
is always the foot of the bed

Careful not to kick her
while we sleep
while she sleeps
for she will cut anyone
who forgets her
or takes her for granted

She’s like nearly everything else
in this life right now
A dark and warm presence
that is capable of wounding
and comforting
without giving warning
that either is about to happen

At the foot of the bed
a small warrior
a soft troublemaker
best little metaphor
for this freefall life

I love to hear her purr


Repost of older poem: Being Neither, Being Both

Being Indian
and White
on Thanksgiving
means being tired
of plowing the six weeks of stupid before this day.
Tired of explaining.  Tired of walking on Pilgrim shells.
Tired of having to justify marking the day
as painful or joyful or neither

or both.  Being Both on Thanksgiving
means I get to give myself the ulcer
I richly deserve.  Means being hungry
in every sense of the word.  Means
I want to give thanks for something
I stole from myself, or perhaps I did not;

being Both on Thanksgiving
means nothing is simple.  I am thankful
for the tightrope, thankful for the mash-up
problems, thankful for looking like
I ought to be oblivious, thankful for
a good talking to.  Being Neither, fully,

on Thanksgiving means I ought to give me
a good talking to.  I am angry enough
to ignore much and fantasize more
over the boiled onions only my Dad eats
and the meat stuffing with chestnuts only my Mom eats,
angry enough to lose my appetite in public,
angry enough to be redder than the damned canned
cranberry sauce.  Being Me on Thanksgiving

means I sit down to the table and eat like a fat man,
eat a continent’s worth of overkill, filling my dark gut
till I have to shed something to be comfortable
by the fire in the too-warm house of my parents
who are long past caring about anything but making sure
that the peace holds till night falls and we all go home

carrying the leftovers with us to feed on
for another whole year.  Another harvest festival
passed, no guarantee of one next year, maybe
we’ll starve over the winter while being Indian, being White,
being Neither, being Both, being the kind
who thinks it matters when you are choking on
so many bones.


Shameless Horn Tooting

Happy Thanksgiving indeed…grateful and pleased to hear that my poem “The Blood I Can Draw” has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize by the good folks at Radius.

Very honored — they have a lot of amazing work to choose from and it’s nothing I would have expected. Thanks!

Maybe fourth time will be the charm… 😉

 


Love Poem For Cloud

Cloud, my Cloud,
my lover Cloud
whose head is a floodgate,
whose body is a storm surge,
whose soft voice can rise
to a cleansing roar;

Cloud,
whenever you open up
I’m afraid I’m going to drown
but then comes a great wave
and I ride, move, shift
toward safe landing,
beach under white stars;

CLOUD!

Backlit by moon,
blued and fluffed
by jealous sun,
changing to meet fickle winds.

Cloud, 
here below
I recall such cool depths 
of you.  

I remember
how you are sometimes
driven and ragged on fast air,
other times
grand, gentle,
drifter in a calm sky;

Cloud,
open up again for me, upon me.
I’m ready now.  I’m more than
ready now —

I need your rain now
to come alive again,
parched as I am,
withered as I am,

thirsty for you as I am.


Resistance

Kids these days
are refusing to answer the phone and
thus they are dragging
the rest of us with them into
an effortless, non-verbal future
through signs and signals,
through texts and flash mobs,
through dilution and over-brief
sloganeering.

They aren’t taking “no” for an answer
when I suggest some of us
prefer to speak, use breath,
bathe each other in unique voice —
they say we’re just old dogs
and maybe they are right
but discussion is futile
so we’ll never know for sure;

they aren’t taking “no” for an answer
to any question whatsoever,
so for this and other reasons
linked to how we’re all
not getting along

I decide that it has to be,
at last,
time for
the end of the world.

I remove all doubt
about where I stand on the moment
by hurling myself to the ground
and tearing into it
to make a cave
or bunker there, a home
in the land,
not on it,
telling myself: 

if you refuse to lose
you become the “no”
they refuse to hear,
so I refuse to let go
of any chance to touch people
directly,

or at least I won’t go
without a fight.

Yes, this is what I say to myself
as I declare it’s time
for the end of times,

although to the Others
it must look for all the world
as though what I am digging
in an act of silly resignation
is my own grave,

so they kick the dirt over me
and move on.


The Bands We Hate

The condemnation
of a popular rock band
says more about
those who condemn it
than about the band itself.

For every one who
condemns the band,
there are ten who 
adore them

and none of the condemnation
ever does a thing for the world

except perhaps serve as
a shiny little token
of our deep need to hate
something, anything,

even when we are liberal enough
or smart enough
to show no hatred for those things
which would lead to our own 
condemnation,

though
on occasion
those things can be discerned 
through analysis
of the bands we say we hate…

says the man, once a viciously cool boy,
who only dimly got
the sulfurous truth that lay behind
his generation’s “Disco Sucks”
rage,

and the later one about 
“Rap’s Not Music,”

and about something brewing now
about old versus young,
about fun versus depth,
about slick versus raw,
about…
the very notion
of 
“versus”
itself.  

Every discussion
about the bands we hate
is in fact a discussion
about the fear
of losing primacy.


The Tangle

I don’t mind that this mind of mine
takes the word “mouse”
and transforms it to “rocket” or “dagger”
or “fishing shack,”

so that the sound of their vermin feet
in my walls becomes a space race,
a war, a life on the sea.  Hear mouse,
realize everything.  I’ve learned

to live with this.  I call it blessing
and not curse, though when I thought 
the word “blessing” at first I heard
“California redwoods” and then “magma,”

and “blessing” became a vision
of forests jumping into blaze along rivers
and roads of liquid fire.  Blessing is fire
here within me.

Everything’s always in the process
of being connected to all else.
Any one word leads to another
as fire leads to ash, as flash flood

leads to canyon, as mouse
leads to dagger rocket fishing shack
or blessing leads to volcano-sparked trees
lit like candles along the coast.  

Shh, says the Universe, by which I mean
the dying willow in the backyard.  Don’t spill
all the secrets of the tangle, little mouse;
there will be blessings upon you if you do.


Howling

The more I think about how things are,
the more I wish I could stop thinking entirely —

but then I’d have to feel
and I couldn’t take that for long.

Take the case of that dog yelping
in the next yard.  Is he in pain,

hungry, lonely?  I try to discern that
from the quality of his cries.

I stop analyzing, start to empathize, and learn
it’s all three at once. I know this at once

as i can feel the howls coalescing
in the hollow at the base of throat.


Dream Big

Exist on the largest scale:
swallow the moon with each inhale,
change space when you breathe out.
Can a word from you change anything?  Speak it

and learn.  In particular time
this moment — your moment —
ought to shake the basalt
below your feet, though you’re standing still.

No more the tiny life, no more the exceptional
detail.  Stretch for something greater.  Thrill
to fail.  Thrill without success.  Leave behind your
dinosaur bones.  Erase the shrunken you.


What We Always Knew Would Happen

you must have knocked or otherwise
fooled me into letting you in

there is no way I escaped from you
only to have you arrive and be welcomed

into my terrified arms
to embrace or wrestle for an interval 

so long since we kiss-bit
shed blood then soothed wounds

what was I thinking to let you arrive thus
included and forbidden to me but present

as no one’s ever been present for me —
full on possession down to spewing and fear

bright demon in my waist 
my center of leaden gravity drawing me to drown

holding my breath as long as I can 
only to release it at last into your own last gasp

what a pair of pistols we have become
opening fire simultaneously

without any need of a word between us
it is just exactly what we always knew would happen


Dead Poet’s Society

On the morning I died
I was listening to…Miles…

Not to Miles in fact
but to Lee Konitz.
I suspect you don’t know
Lee Konitz, so I’ll default
to Miles and give you
some peace,
a picture to hang on to,
a soundtrack
you don’t have to think about
for the first time.

On the morning I died
I was writing.

What I was writing
of course remains
unfinished.  I’d prefer it
to be discarded.
It was just getting to a boil.
It wasn’t ready.
It wasn’t ready.

At the moment I began to die
I looked out the window.

Must I explain everything?
Will I be explaining everything
to each of you forever?
I looked out the window.
There was a shadow crossing the yard.
A large bird, a dog I just missed seeing.
It doesn’t have to mean a thing:
just a man about to die
noticed something outside
and did not recognize
what it was.

As I began to die I came up
with the next line I should write.

I came back just to tell you
that all of us end with our last line
appearing in our heads, but it feels like
just the next line.
It has no portent or finality,
just feels like a line
you should have done something with years ago
but you never had the right
place to put it.

And then…I died.

That’s it.  I died,
some stuff done,
some undone.
I got the perfect line.
I have the place for it now.
The best words.
The best order.
You’ll do the same someday.

Until then consider me
the incinerated
in the distance,
on a breeze,
vanishing.

Don’t ask for more.


November

More tapping,
more soft fall and landing,
more speech of dripping leaves
after rain.

More howl
to our midnight wind.
More window spatter
to our gale gusts.

More eyes that won’t
look away.
More hands making
first contact.

More rough music that makes us
terrified, exhilarated, 
dance-filled, then exhausted
and ready for silence.

More, more…
more gratitude for how painful
this world can be
but often isn’t; 

more holding, more embracing,
more firestoking, more
handing over of our coats
to those who need them more.

More long hours
of side by side play,
more destroyed beds,
more windows fogged.  

It isn’t easy
to explain this desire to suck up
all of existence
into oneself.

Enough to say
a hollow man seeks 
to be full, but
never feels that way.


Then And Now

In a younger time
I did my work
in late darkness,
in after hours,
fighting sleep;

at my best
in a room
with lights off,
door closed behind me
to leave
what had happened in daylight
outside.

Now,
my work unfolds
at night’s end,
before dawn;

after sleep, still
in darkness, still
in a black room
with door closed.

I once was glad
for that darkness
which pulled a shroud
over what had been;

I may be more glad
for this darkness,
a stage curtain
which when pulled back
frames and shapes
what’s yet to come.